Thursday, February 13, 2014

Now Boston mayor vows to boycott New York parade in gay row

THE MAYOR of a second US city has threatened to
boycott the St Patrick's Day parade over the exclusion of gay and
lesbian groups.

The move will increase pressure on Taoiseach Enda Kenny
who has defied calls to boycott the St Patrick's Day march in New York
despite the decision of the city's mayor, Bill de Blasio, to boycott the
event.

Boston mayor Martin J Walsh, who is the son of Irish
immigrants from Galway, announced that he would not attend the event on
March 16 unless organisers lift a ban on posters promoting LGBT rights.

Mr
Kenny is scheduled to visit Boston on the day of the parade, however,
he has not indicated whether he will march in the event.

Mr Walsh is the second US mayor to adopt such a stance after New York mayor Bill de Blasio vowed to boycott his city's parade.

Further pressure will now mount on Mr Kenny to change his mind.

Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore
has backed Mr Kenny's decision to march in the New York procession but
said he hopes the rules banning LGBT posters would change.

"The
New York parade is a very important parade. I believe that the
government should be represented at that parade, as it's always been,"
Mr Gilmore said.

"I think it's important that we are part of that
parade. But I do believe that the rules of the parade should be changed
and my views on that have been well known for some time."

Social Protection Minister Joan Burton has been criticised by her cabinet colleague Leo Varadkar after she vowed to boycott the same parade.

Ms Burton, who will be in New York on St Patrick's Day, called on organisers to make the event "more inclusive".

Mr
Varadkar said that while he would like to see the rules surrounding
posters changed, he believes such boycotts are counter-productive.

BOYCOTT

But
Ms Burton's stance is receiving significant support from several Labour
colleagues, with the party's Seanad leader Ivana Bacik accusing the
parade organisers of discriminating against gay people.

"I fully
support Minister Joan Burton in her welcome decision not to participate
in an event that sends a message of exclusion and intolerance towards a
whole community," Ms Bacik said.

"The discriminatory
stance of the parade organisers is out of keeping with a modern and
progressive Irish identity that seeks to embrace diversity. I would urge
other Irish ministers and political leaders to follow the principled
stand taken by Minister Burton and (New York) Mayor De Blasio."